Jie Wang, Shiguang Miao, Ashok Kumar Pokharel, Jingjing Dou, Bin Ma, Chunlei Meng, Yuhuan Li
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Lateral terrestrial water flow in the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model and its hydrologically enhanced version, WRF-Hydro, is calculated on a routing grid based on infiltration excess in Land Surface Model (LSM) grid disaggregates to the routing grids. However, this design neglects the lateral terrestrial water flow within LSM grids and does not resolve water lateral transport in LSM. In this study, we develop a lateral terrestrial water flow scheme in the Noah with multiparameterization (Noah-MP) of WRF-Hydro grids to address this knowledge gap and evaluate its influence on land surface hydrological processes. Our results indicate that lateral terrestrial water flow leads to 62.3% of grid surface water outflow, resulting in a decrease in accumulated water depth by 123.88 mm. In urban areas, the accumulated water depth further reduces by 21.11 mm when considering the pipe discharge scheme. Compared to the default WRF-Hydro simulation, the lateral terrestrial water flow combined with pipe discharge can effectively advance the calibrated WRF-Hydro modelling capability and reproduce the water depth reasonably compared to the observation in urban areas. Further, our analysis indicates that the decreasing lateral terrestrial water flow in LSM primarily reduces overland flow and increases streamflow in routing grids, mainly through redistributing water from the steep slopes towards the lower elevations and ultimately converting it to streamflow in the channel network.
期刊介绍:
Hydrological Processes is an international journal that publishes original scientific papers advancing understanding of the mechanisms underlying the movement and storage of water in the environment, and the interaction of water with geological, biogeochemical, atmospheric and ecological systems. Not all papers related to water resources are appropriate for submission to this journal; rather we seek papers that clearly articulate the role(s) of hydrological processes.